***Official Dec 2014 SAT (US ONLY)***

<p>Can anyone find Alice birthday passage?
@Woandering could you send me the omnivore passage please</p>

<p>@Wondering could you send it to me as well? Thanks</p>

<p>@fireonice‌
<a href=“Full text of "Michael Pollan-The Omnivores Dilemma"”>Michael Pollan-The Omnivores Dilemma : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive;

<p>Do control F, and search for “neophilia,” and go down to the second one. That’s where our passage is.</p>

<p>@Jackytang23‌
Pretty sure it was 650. Do you know the exact question?</p>

<p>I’m very confident that we got that one correct, @fireonice</p>

<p>@Jackytang23‌ Was that the one where it had 2 values and then another value that they both shared. Something like 700something for one thing and 300something for another and 100something had both or whatever? The formula is Value1+Value2- Common value. I forgot what I got on that lol, or maybe Im thinking of the wrong question</p>

<p>650^</p>

<p>@mizejonathan17 I’m glad to hear that! But do you remember if “in” was already at the end of the original sentence?</p>

<p>yeah something like that, does anyone have the original question?</p>

<p>Can someone explain the 192 arc question again I still don’t get why its not 128?</p>

<p>@APScholar18 It’s 3/4 of a circle, not a half.</p>

<p>But how we figure that out?</p>

<p>@Woandering‌ </p>

<p>uhh…nah</p>

<p>opportunistic was correct</p>

<p>@froggyfresh what did you put for opportunistic question?</p>

<p>3 No Errors for Writing?</p>

<p>@froggy what question are you referring to?</p>

<p>@froggyfresh‌
?</p>

<p>The Alice birthday passage is from “The Ropewalk” by Carrie Brown. I can’t find the text though.</p>

<p>It was opportunistic.</p>

<p>Companies were advertising for commercial profits on memorial day, a day that is commemorative of fallen veterans</p>

<p>opportunistic:</p>

<p>exploiting opportunities with little regard to principle or consequences . </p>

<p>@fireonice I, of course, can’t say with 100% certainty that “it” wasn’t at the end of the sentence, but if it was there, I sure didn’t see it</p>

<p>The question was 670 students received vaccine A. 170 received both. 300 received B. How many received AT LEAST ONE of the two vaccinations? I got 500 because 670-170= 500</p>